User:Ndhanir

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Web.py is a free and open source Web application framework that is as simple as it is powerful.

The web.py slogan is: "Think about the ideal way to write a web app. Write the code to make it happen."<ref></ref>. The goal of web.py is to build the ideal way to make web apps. web.py allows the user to build HTTP responses instead of exposing Python objects. In web.py, database can be accessed easily as the framework makes database look like an object. Also, the template system in web.py helps the user to bring Python into HTML<ref></ref>. "It's the anti-framework framework. web.py doesn't get in your way." explained founder Steve Huffman.

Some of the websites which uses web.py are

  • Frinki, a new social network in spanish.
  • oyster.com, a website that reviews hotels uses web.py for the entire website.
  • Make History, a project of the 9/11 memorial museum.

History

web.py was originally published while Aaron swartz worked at reddit.com, where the site used it as it grew to become one of the top 1000 sites according to Alexa and served millions of daily page views<ref></ref>. The site was rewritten using other tools after being acquired by Condé Nast.

Why Web.py?<ref></ref>

The reasons for using web.py are

  • Simplicity
  • Freedom
  • Writing clean code
  • Minimalism
  • A solid web framework

Installation<ref></ref>

To install web.py on Linux based operating system,

  • Firstly, download the following tar file:
wget http://webpy.org/static/web.py-0.37.tar.gz
  • Extract the downloaded tar file:
tar -zxvf web.py-0.37.tar.gz
  • Go to web.py-0.37 directory:
cd web.py-0.37/
  • Install and make it accessible to all the applications:
sudo python setup.py install

Web.py skeleton<ref></ref>

Every web application needs a skeleton. A sample skeleton of web.py application looks as follows.

  • doc: Documentation of all the files.
  • licenses: All the licenses of the project and the libraries used in the application.
  • requirements: Specifying the third party libraries.
  • sh: bash script files of the project.
  • www: The required web application itself.
    • app: contains the application modules.
      • controllers: This module contains the handler modules of controller package.
      • tools: Tools that are used for the project.
      • views]: Template files.
      • models: Database models of the application.
      • bridge: It is used to communicate with the server which is written in another language.
    • lib: The library files developed for the project. These are different from the tools mentioned in the app. Libraries can be used in other projects where as tools are limited to the project itself.
    • public: This folder contains the minimized compiled CSS, Javascript, CoffeeScript files and images so the files in this folder are production ready and can't be used in development.
    • static: Contains the development CSS, CoffeeScript, Javascript, and images files of the project.
    • test: These are the test files.
    • tmp: Garbage files.
    • main.py: These are the only files that are directly executed by the server.
    • main_development.py: Main executable file in development mode.
    • settings.py: Global constants and settings of the application.
    • urls.py: Contains URL's of the application

Features of web.py

web.py has two unique features

Databases<ref></ref>

The database package lets the user access various different databases. Accessing different databases refers to connecting multiple databases. However, its not an ORM. It is similar to sqlite3 package which doesn't use ORM. This feature is missing in Django (another web framework). web.py has flexible modules which allow the user to wipe it out completely and use with another web framework. Before creating database object, the user must install appropriate database library like psycopg2 for PostgreSQL, MySQLdb for MySQL and sqlite3 for SQLite. Working with more databases is not at all difficult with web.py which is explained by the following example:

db1 = web.database(dbn='postgres', db='dbname1', user='username1', pw='password2')
db2 = web.database(dbn='postgres', db='dbname2', user='username2', pw='password2')

Forms<ref></ref>

A forms package is present in web.py which let's the user create forms and validators. The form module of web.py allows the ability to generate html forms, get user input, and validate it before processing it or adding it to a database. But it doesn't have built-in protection against CSRF. A sample login form is as follows:

login = form.Form(
    form.Textbox('username'),
    form.Password('password'),
    form.Button('Login'),
)

Another interesting feature about web.py is its flexibility. It has flexible modules which can be used with another framework.

Hello world example

import web
urls = (
	'/', 'index'
	)

class index:
	def GET(self):
		return "Hello, ECE517!"

if __name__ == "__main__":
	app = web.application(urls, globals())
	app.run()

If the above example is considered, then the user start the application by importing the web.py module using the following command

import web

The most important part of the website is its URL structure. web.py makes it easy to make great URLs.

urls = (
  '/', 'index'
)

The first part is a regular expressions that matches a URL, like /, /help/faq, /item/, etc. The parentheses say to capture that piece of the matched data for use later on. The second part is the name of a class to send the request to, like index, view, welcome, hello (which gets the hello ECE517 of the welcome module), or get_\1. \1 is replaced by the first capture of the regular expression; any remaining captures get passed to function.<ref></ref>

At the top of each application, the user usually see the full URL dispatching scheme defined as a tuple.

urls = (
    "/tasks/?", "signin",
    "/tasks/list", "listing",
    "/tasks/post", "post",
    "/tasks/act", "actions",
    "/tasks/signup", "signup"
)

The format of this tuple is: url-path-pattern, handler-class this pattern will repeat as more url patterns are defined.

Conclusion

web.py is a minimalist framework whose aim is not to abstract away the details of interacting with the Web, but to make that interaction easier. It is designed in such a way that user will get started quickly with web.py and find writing HTTP GET function handlers directly<ref></ref>. Likewise, the web.py database system does not abstract away SQL rather than hide the fact that the user is querying a database. It hides the details of working with different databases. The framework of web.py is light, photonic when compared to frameworks like flask.

See Also

Django

Bottle

References

Wiki write up

About Review mapping controller

/* When a reviewerreport reviews, assigning reviews and quizzes to teams. It also contains methods to assign reviews to participants automatically*/ Ignore this

Review mapping controller contains methods related to peer reviewing strategies. It contains methods to add a reviewer, delete a reviewer, selecting a reviewer. Depending on the number of students and number of submissions, the topics to be reviewed are assigned to the students automatically. If a user wants to look for the submission team , it returns the team by comparing the submission id's with the team id's. Also, it assigns quizzes dynamically. Generation of review report, feedback report and teammate review is done.

Code Improvements

1. Unused variables and arguments: There are unused variables in the methods. If there are unused variables in the methods, it uses stack unnecessarily. So, it is better to remove the unused variables.

When both keys and values are not used, but given as arguments, then the used variables can be added "_" or replaced with "_" to represent it as unused variable but allowed in the arguments.

At line 533 and line 539
Previous Code: teams_hash = unsorted_teams_hash.sort_by{|k, v| v}.to_h
After Changing the code: teams_hash = unsorted_teams_hash.sort_by{|_, v| v}.to_h

2. Use sample instead of shuffle When sample is used, the elements are chosen by using random and unique indices in the array so that the elements doesn't repeat in the array. This cannot be guaranteed in shuffle.


Previous Code:
assignment_team = assignment_teams.to_a.shuffle[0] rescue nil

topic = assignment.candidate_topics_to_review(reviewer).to_a.shuffle[0] rescue nil

After Changing the code:

assignment_team = assignment_teams.to_a.sample rescue nil

topic = assignment.candidate_topics_to_review(reviewer).to_a.sample rescue nil


Testing UI

Peer review information:

  • Instructor Login:
       Username: Instructor6
       Password: password
  • Student login:
       Username: Student6384
       Password: password

Testing UI:

  1. Login as an instructor (Using Instructor6 will help you import the participants from other assignments).
  2. Navigate to "Manage->Assignments".
  3. Click on "New Public Assignment" for creating a new assignment.
  4. Create a new assignment by providing assignment name, selecting a course, submission directory (Give any name) and description URL.
  5. Select "has teams?" and provide the team size. Click on create to create a new assignment.
    1. After that, click on review strategy and limit the number of reviews per submission.
    2. Click on "Due dates" and update date for submission and review. Adjust the review date and time in order to test the reviews.
    3. Click on "save". A new assignment is created and it can be viewed in "Manage->Assignments" section.
  6. In order to add participants, there are two methods to add students to the assignment.
    1. Click on "add participants" against the assignment. Enter the user login to add the student. Add atleast 6 participants so that the review mapping can be seen.
    2. Click on any previous assignment "add participants" and export the students list (I used wiki assignment).